What is “love”? What and how do we love? How does love change us? What are our ethical responsibilities in love? How do we love our friends, romantic and sexual partners, and parents and children differently? Why should we love at all? On this course, we will explore ethics by considering questions about love such as these. We will examine specific kinds of love, concrete ethical issues about them, and more abstract philosophical questions that they raise. Thus, for instance, we will study arguments about romantic union and children’s autonomy, issues raised by “love drugs” and by sexual consent, and related questions about the self, rationality, responsibility, and the nature of ethical values. Our focus throughout will be on your own views and on how you can reflect on, develop, and defend them by engaging with philosophical ideas and arguments and with concrete examples, in class and in writing.
The course is divided into three main parts, each focusing on a particular kind of love. The first part focuses on romantic love: here we will examine four different conceptions of romantic love, as well as debates over “love drugs” and gender expectations. The second part focuses on sex, and particularly on whether sex has “meaning,” the nature of consent, and issues of exclusivity and discrimination. The final part of the course focuses on parents and children: here we will explore the decision to have children, the value of childhood, and questions about the (un)conditionality of parental love and the acceptability of genetic engineering.
After the first and second parts of the course, you will prepare a written assignment, and after the third we will review for the final exam. In the last week of each part of the course, we will also hold a more structured group debate, two of which you will participate in as a member of a group.Throughout the semester you will also be assessed by your participation in classes and your contributions to forums and other exercises on the class Moodle site.